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Symptoms of Head injury
List of symptoms of Head injury:
The list of signs and symptoms mentioned in various sources for Head injury includes the 37 symptoms listed below:
- Head wound
- Local bleeding
- Local swelling
- Intracranial bleeding
- Brain injury symptoms
- Brain compression - and various symptoms of brain compression:
- Headache
- Irritability
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Muscle spasms
- Uncontrolled jerky movements
- Drowsiness
- Gradual loss of consciousness
- Loss of consciousness
- Death - in some cases if not treated
- Confusion
- Memory problems
- Bleeding
- Headaches
- Bruising
- Fractured bones
- Vision difficulties
- Hearing problems
- Smelling difficulties
- Neck stiffness
Note that Head injury symptoms usually refers to various symptoms known to a patient, but the phrase Head injury signs may refer to those signs only noticable by a doctor.
More ways to research these symptoms: To research other symptoms use the symptom center, or to research causes of more than one symptom in combination, try our multi-symptom search.
Research More About Head injury
Do I have Head injury?
- Head injury: Introduction
- Head injury: Diagnostic Testing to confirm diagnosis
- Alternative diagnoses and misdiagnosis for Head injury
- Failure to Diagnose Head injury
- Treatments for Head injury
- More about Head injury
Wrongly Diagnosed with Head injury?
The list of other diseases or medical conditions that may be on the differential diagnosis list of alternative diagnoses for Head injury includes:
See the full list of 5 alternative diagnoses for Head injury
More about symptoms of Head injury:
More information about symptoms of Head injury and related conditions:
- Other diseases with similar symptoms and common misdiagnoses
- Tests to determine if these are the symptoms of Head injury
- Symptoms that may be caused by complications of Head injury
- Underlying causes of Head injury
- Associated conditions for Head injury
- Risk factors for Head injury
Other Possible Causes of these Symptoms
Click on any of the symptoms below to see a full list of other causes including diseases, medical conditions, toxins, drug interactions, or drug side effect causes of that symptom.
- Bleeding - see all causes of Bleeding symptoms
- Blurred vision - see all causes of Blurred vision
- Brain injury symptoms - see all causes of Brain symptoms
- Bruising - see all causes of Bruising
- Concussion - see all causes of Syncope
- Confusion - see all causes of Confusion
- Confusion - see all causes of Confusion
- Death - see all causes of Death
- Drowsiness - see all causes of Drowsiness
- Drowsiness - see all causes of Drowsiness
- Head wound - see all causes of Head injury
- Headache - see all causes of Headache
- Headache - see all causes of Headache
- Headaches - see all causes of Headache
- Hearing problems - see all causes of Hearing symptoms
- Intracranial bleeding - see all causes of Brain symptoms
- Irritability - see all causes of Irritability
- Irritability - see all causes of Irritability
- Local bleeding - see all causes of Bleeding symptoms
- Local swelling - see all causes of Local swelling
- Loss of consciousness - see all causes of Syncope
- Memory loss - see all causes of Memory loss
- Memory problems - see all causes of Memory symptoms
- Muscle spasms - see all causes of Muscle spasms
- Nausea - see all causes of Nausea
- Nausea - see all causes of Nausea
- Neck stiffness - see all causes of Neck stiffness
- Pupil changes - see all causes of Pupil symptoms
- Smelling difficulties - see all causes of Loss of smell
- Syncope - see all causes of Syncope
- Uncontrolled jerky movements - see all causes of Muscle spasms
- Vision difficulties - see all causes of Vision loss
- Vomiting - see all causes of Vomiting
- Vomiting - see all causes of Vomiting
Medical Books Online about Head injury
Medical Books Excerpts Excerpts of published medical book chapters related to Head injury are available from published medical books for more detailed information about Head injury.
- "The 10-Minute Diagnosis Manual: Symptoms and Signs in the Time-Limited Encounter"
- [ read ]
Copyright notice for book excerpts: Copyright © 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. All rights reserved.
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Symptoms of Head injury: Online Medical Books
16 MEDICAL BOOKS ONLINE! Review excerpts from medical books online, free, without registration, for more information about the symptoms of Head injury.
Headache:
Signs and symptoms
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Initially, migraine headaches usually produce unilateral, pulsating pain, which later becomes more generalized. They’re commonly preceded by a scintillating scotoma, hemianopsia, unilateral paresthesia, or speech disorders. The patient may experience irritability, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, and photophobia. (See Clinical features of migraine headaches.)
Both muscle contraction and traction-inflammatory vascular headaches produce a dull, persistent ache, tender spots on the head and neck, and a feeling of tightness around the head, with a characteristic “hatband” distribution. The pain is usually severe and unrelenting. If caused by intracranial bleeding, these headaches may result in neurologic deficits, such as paresthesia and muscle weakness; narcotics may fail to relieve pain in these cases. If caused by a tumor, pain is most severe when the patient awakens.
Open trauma wounds:
Signs and symptoms
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
In all open wounds, assess the extent of injury, vital signs, level of consciousness (LOC), obvious skeletal damage, local neurologic deficits, and general patient condition. Obtain an accurate history of the injury from the patient or witnesses, including such details as the mechanism and time of injury and any treatment already provided. If the injury involved a weapon, notify the police.
Also assess for peripheral nerve damage — a common complication in lacerations and other open trauma wounds — as well as for fractures and dislocations. Signs of peripheral nerve damage vary with location:
❑ radial nerve — weak forearm dorsiflexion, inability to extend thumb in a hitchhiker’s sign
❑ median nerve — numbness in tip of index finger; inability to place forearm in prone position; weak forearm, thumb, and index finger flexion
❑ ulnar nerve — numbness in tip of little finger, clawing of hand
❑ peroneal nerve — footdrop, inability to extend the foot or big toe
❑ sciatic and tibial nerves — paralysis of ankles and toes, footdrop, leg weakness, numbness in sole.
Most open wounds require emergency treatment. In those with suspected nerve involvement, however, electromyography, nerve conduction, and electrical stimulation tests can provide more detailed information about possible peripheral nerve damage.
Abdominal trauma:
Signs and Symptoms
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Pallor, cyanosis, pain, tachycardia, dyspnea, hypotension, bruising, abdominal distention and rigidity
Blunt and penetrating abdominal injuries:
Signs and symptoms
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Symptoms vary with the degree of injury and the organs damaged. Penetrating abdominal injuries cause obvious wounds (gunshots commonly produce both entrance and exit wounds) with variable blood loss, pain, and tenderness. They commonly result in pallor, cyanosis, tachycardia, shortness of breath, and hypotension. (See Projectile pathway.)Blunt abdominal injuries cause severe pain (which may radiate beyond the abdomen to the shoulders), bruises, abrasions, contusions, or distention. They may also result in tenderness, abdominal splinting or rigidity, nausea, vomiting, pallor, cyanosis, tachycardia, and shortness of breath. Rib fractures commonly accompany blunt injuries. (See Effects of blunt abdominal trauma, page 300.)
In both blunt and penetrating injuries, massive blood loss may cause hypovolemic shock. Damage to solid abdominal organs (liver, spleen, pancreas, and kidneys) generally causes hemorrhage. Damage to hollow organs (stomach, intestine, gallbladder, and bladder) causes rupture and release of the organs’ contents (including bacteria) into the abdomen, which in turn produces inflammation and, possibly, infection.
Blunt chest injuries:
Signs and symptoms
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Rib fractures produce tenderness, slight edema over the fracture site, and pain that worsens with deep breathing and movement; this painful breathing causes the patient to display shallow, splinted respirations that may lead to hypoventilation. Sternal fractures, which are usually transverse and located in the middle or upper sternum, produce persistent chest pains, even at rest. If a fractured rib tears the pleura and punctures a lung, it causes pneumothorax. This usually produces severe dyspnea, cyanosis, agitation, extreme pain and, when air escapes into chest tissue, subcutaneous emphysema.
Multiple rib fractures within two or more places may cause flail chest, in which a portion of the chest wall “caves in,” causing a loss of chest wall integrity and preventing adequate lung inflation. (See Flail chest: Paradoxical breathing.)
Signs and symptoms of flail chest include bruised skin, extreme pain caused by rib fracture and disfigurement, paradoxical chest movements, tachycardia, hypotension, respiratory acidosis, cyanosis, and rapid, shallow respirations. Flail chest can also cause tension pneumothorax, a condition in which air enters the chest but can’t be ejected during exhalation. This life-threatening thoracic pressure buildup causes lung collapse and subsequent mediastinal shift. The cardinal symptoms of tension pneumothorax include severe dyspnea, absent breath sounds (on the affected side), agitation, jugular vein distention, tracheal deviation (away from the affected side), cyanosis, and shock.
Hemothorax occurs when a rib lacerates lung tissue or an intercostal artery, causing blood to collect in the pleural cavity, thereby compressing the lung and limiting respiratory capacity. It can also result from rupture of large or small pulmonary vessels.
Massive hemothorax is the most common cause of shock after a chest injury. Although slight bleeding occurs even with mild pneumothorax, such bleeding resolves very quickly, usually without changing the patient’s condition. Rib fractures may also cause pulmonary contusion (resulting in hemoptysis, hypoxia, dyspnea, and possible obstruction), large myocardial tears (which can be rapidly fatal), and small myocardial tears (which can cause pericardial effusion).
Myocardial contusions — actual bruising of the heart muscle — produce electrocardiographic (ECG) abnormalities. Laceration or rupture of the aorta is almost always immediately fatal. Because aortic laceration may develop 24 hours after blunt injury, patient observation is critical. Diaphragmatic rupture (usually on the left side) causes severe respiratory distress. Unless treated early, abdominal viscera may herniate through the rupture into the thorax (with resulting bowel sounds in the chest), compromising both circulation and the lungs' vital capacity.
Other complications of blunt chest trauma may include cardiac tamponade, pulmonary artery tears, ventricular rupture, and bronchial, tracheal, or esophageal tears or rupture.
Rape trauma syndrome:
Signs and symptoms
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
When a rape victim arrives in the emergency department, assess her physical injuries. If she isn’t seriously injured, allow her to remain clothed and take her to a private room where she can talk with you or a counselor before the necessary physical examination. (See If the rape victim is a child.) Remember, immediate reactions to rape differ and can include crying, laughing, hostility, confusion, withdrawal, or outward calm; anger and rage may not surface until later. During the attack, the victim may have felt demeaned, helpless, and afraid for her life; afterward, she may feel ashamed, guilty, shocked, and vulnerable and have a sense of disbelief and lowered self-esteem. Offer support and reassurance. Help her explore her feelings; listen, convey trust and respect, and remain nonjudgmental. Don’t leave her alone unless she asks you to do so.
Being careful to upset the victim as little as possible, obtain an accurate history of the rape, pertinent to physical assessment. (Remember, your notes may be used as evidence if the rapist is tried.) Record the victim’s statements in the first person, using quotation marks. Also, document objective information provided by others. Never speculate as to what may have happened or record subjective impressions or thoughts. Include in your notes the time the victim arrived at the facility, the date and time of the alleged rape, and the time that the victim was examined. Ask the victim if she’s allergic to penicillin or other drugs, if she has had recent illnesses (especially venereal disease), and if she was pregnant before the attack. Find out the date of her last menstrual period and details of her obstetric and gynecologic history.
Thoroughly explain the examination she’ll have, and tell her it’s necessary to rule out internal injuries and obtain a specimen for venereal disease testing. Obtain her informed consent for treatment and for the police report. Allow her some control if possible; for instance, ask her if she’s ready to be examined or if she would rather wait a bit.
Before the examination, ask the victim whether she douched, bathed, or washed before coming to the hospital. Note this on her chart. Have her change into a hospital gown, and place her clothing in paper bags. Label each bag and its contents.
Tell the victim she may urinate, but warn her not to wipe or otherwise clean the perineal area. Stay with her, or ask a counselor to stay with her, throughout the examination.
Frostbite may be deep or superficial. Superficial frostbite affects skin and subcutaneous tissue, especially of the face, ears, extremities, and other exposed areas. Although it may go unnoticed at first, frostbite produces burning, tingling, numbness, swelling, and a mottled, blue-gray skin color when the person returns to a warm place.
Deep frostbite extends beyond subcutaneous tissue and usually affects the hands or feet. The skin becomes white until it’s thawed; then it turns purplish blue. Deep frostbite also produces pain, skin blisters, tissue necrosis, and gangrene. (See Recognizing frostbite.)
Indications of hypothermia (a core body temperature below 957 F [357 C]) vary with severity:
❑ mild hypothermia — temperature of 89.67 to 957 F (327 to 357 C), severe shivering, slurred speech, and amnesia
❑ moderate hypothermia — temperature of 867 to 89.67 F (307 to 327 C), unresponsiveness or confusion, muscle rigidity, peripheral cyanosis and, with improper rewarming, signs of shock
❑ severe hypothermia — temperature of 777 to 867 F (257 to 307 C), loss of deep tendon reflexes, and ventricular fibrillation. The patient may appear dead (in a state of rigor mortis), with no palpable pulse or audible heart sounds. His pupils may be dilated. A temperature drop below 777 F causes cardiopulmonary arrest and death.
Migraine headaches and muscle contraction headaches have different signs and symptoms.
Initially, a migraine headache usually produces unilateral, pulsating pain that later becomes more generalized. The headache is commonly preceded by a scintillating scotoma, hemianopsia, unilateral paresthesia, or speech disorders. The patient may experience irritability, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, and photophobia. (See Clinical features of headache, page 364.)
A muscle contraction headache produces a dull, persistent ache; tender spots on the head and neck; and a feeling of tightness around the head, with a characteristic “hatband” distribution. The pain is usually severe and unrelenting.
If caused by intracranial bleeding, the muscle contraction headache may result in neurologic deficits, such as paresthesia and muscle weakness; narcotics fail to relieve the pain in these cases. If the headache is caused by a tumor, pain is most severe when the patient awakens.
In all open wounds, assess the extent of injury, vital signs, level of consciousness (LOC), obvious skeletal damage, local neurologic deficits, and general patient condition. Obtain an accurate history of the injury from the patient or witnesses, including such details as the mechanism and time of injury and any treatment already provided. If the injury involved a weapon, notify the police.
Also assess for peripheral nerve damage — a common complication in lacerations and other open trauma wounds, as well as for fractures and dislocations. Signs of peripheral nerve damage vary with location as follows:
❑ radial nerve — weak forearm dorsiflexion, inability to extend thumb in a hitchhiker’s sign
❑ median nerve — numbness in tip of index finger; inability to place forearm in prone position; weak forearm, thumb, and index finger flexion
❑ ulnar nerve — numbness in tip of little finger, clawing of hand
❑ peroneal nerve — footdrop, inability to extend the foot or big toe
❑ sciatic and tibial nerves — paralysis of ankles and toes, footdrop, weakness in leg, numbness in sole.
Most open wounds require emergency treatment. In those with suspected nerve involvement, however, electromyography, nerve conduction, and electrical stimulation tests can provide more detailed information about possible peripheral nerve damage.
Rib fractures produce tenderness, slight edema over the fracture site, and pain that worsens with deep breathing and movement; this painful breathing causes the patient to display shallow, splinted respirations that may lead to hypoventilation.
Sternal fractures, which are usually transverse and located in the middle or upper sternum, produce persistent chest pain, even at rest. If a fractured rib tears the pleura and punctures a lung, it causes pneumothorax, which usually produces severe dyspnea, cyanosis, agitation, extreme pain and, when air escapes into chest tissue, subcutaneous emphysema.
Multiple rib fractures may cause flail chest: a portion of the chest wall “caves” in, which causes a loss of chest wall integrity and prevents adequate lung inflation. Bruised skin, extreme pain caused by rib fracture and disfigurement, paradoxical chest movements, and rapid, shallow respirations are all signs and symptoms of flail chest, as are tachycardia, hypotension, respiratory acidosis, and cyanosis.
Flail chest can also cause tension pneumothorax, a condition in which air enters the chest but can’t be ejected during exhalation; life-threatening thoracic pressure buildup causes lung collapse and subsequent mediastinal shift. The cardinal signs and symptoms of tension pneumothorax include tracheal deviation (away from the affected side), cyanosis, severe dyspnea, absent breath sounds (on the affected side), agitation, jugular vein distention, and shock.
When a rib lacerates lung tissue or an intercostal artery, hemothorax occurs, causing blood to collect in the pleural cavity, thereby compressing the lung and limiting respiratory capacity. It can also result from rupture of large or small pulmonary vessels.
Massive hemothorax is the most common cause of shock following chest trauma. Although slight bleeding occurs even with mild pneumothorax, such bleeding resolves very quickly, usually without changing the patient’s condition.
Rib fractures may also cause pulmonary contusion (resulting in hemoptysis, hypoxia, dyspnea and, possibly, obstruction), large myocardial tears (which can be rapidly fatal), and small myocardial tears (which can cause pericardial effusion).
Myocardial contusions produce electrocardiogram (ECG) abnormalities. Laceration or rupture of the aorta is nearly always immediately fatal. In rare cases, aortic laceration may develop 24 hours after blunt injury, so patient observation is critical.
Diaphragmatic rupture (usually on the left side) causes severe respiratory distress. Unless treated early, abdominal viscera may herniate through the rupture into the thorax, compromising both circulation and the vital capacity of the lungs.
Other complications of blunt chest trauma include cardiac tamponade, pulmonary artery tears, ventricular rupture, and bronchial, tracheal, or esophageal tears or rupture.
A physical examination (including a pelvic examination by a gynecologist) will probably show signs of physical trauma, especially if the assault was prolonged. Depending on specific body areas attacked, a patient may have a sore throat, mouth irritation, difficulty swallowing, ecchymoses, or rectal pain and bleeding.
If additional physical violence accompanied the rape, the victim may have hematomas, lacerations, bleeding, severe internal injuries, or hemorrhage, and if the rape occurred outdoors, she may suffer from exposure. X-rays may reveal fractures. The patient may have injuries severe enough to require hospitalization.
❑ When a rape victim arrives in the emergency department, assess her physical injuries. If she isn’t seriously injured, allow her to remain clothed and take her to a private room where she can talk with you or a counselor before the necessary physical examination.
❑ Immediate reactions to rape differ. The patient may experience crying, laughing, hostility, confusion, withdrawal, or outward calm; in many cases, anger and rage don’t surface until later. During the assault, the victim may have felt demeaned, helpless, and afraid for her life; afterward, she may feel ashamed, guilty, shocked, and vulnerable, and have a sense of disbelief and lowered self-esteem.
❑ Offer support and reassurance. Help her explore her feelings; listen, convey trust and respect, and remain nonjudgmental. Don’t leave her alone unless she asks you to.
❑ Being careful to upset the victim as little as possible, obtain an accurate history of the rape, pertinent to physical assessment.
CLINICAL TIP: Make sure your documentation is thorough. Your notes may be used as evidence if the rapist is tried.
❑ Record the victim’s statements in the first person, using quotation marks. Also, document objective information provided by others.
❑ Never speculate as to what may have happened or record subjective impressions or thoughts.
❑ Include in your notes the time the victim arrived at the hospital, the date and time of the alleged rape, and the time the victim was examined. Ask the victim whether she’s allergic to penicillin or other drugs, whether she has recently been ill (especially with venereal disease), or whether she was pregnant before the attack. Also ask the date of her last menstrual period and details of her obstetric-gynecologic history.
❑ Thoroughly explain the examination she’ll have, and tell her that it’s necessary to rule out internal injuries and obtain a specimen for venereal disease testing. Obtain her informed consent for treatment and for the police report. Allow her some control, if possible — for example, ask her whether she’s ready to be examined or if she’d rather wait a bit.
❑ Before the examination, ask the victim whether she douched, bathed, or washed before coming to the hospital. Note this on her chart. Have her change into a hospital gown, and place her clothing in paper bags. (Never use plastic bags, because secretions and seminal stains will mold, destroying valuable evidence.) Label each bag and its contents.
❑ Tell the victim she may urinate, but warn her not to wipe or otherwise clean the perineal area. If the patient wishes, ask a counselor to stay with her throughout the examination. This examination is typically very distressing for the rape victim. Reassure her and allow her as much control as possible.
❑ Throughout the examination, provide support and reassurance, and carefully label all possible evidence. Before the victim’s pelvic area is examined, take vital signs, and if the patient is wearing a tampon, remove it, wrap it, and label it as evidence.
❑ During the examination, make sure all specimens collected, including those for semen and gonorrhea, receive careful labeling. Include the patient’s name, the physician’s name, and the location from which the specimen was obtained. List all specimens in your notes.
❑ If the case comes to trial, specimens will be used for evidence, so accuracy is essential. Most emergency departments have “rape kits” with containers for specimens. Carefully collect and label fingernail scrapings and foreign material obtained by combing the victim’s pubic hair; these also provide valuable evidence. Note to whom these specimens are given.
GENDER INFLUENCE: For a male victim, be especially alert for injury to the mouth, perineum, and anus. Obtain a pharyngeal specimen for a gonorrhea culture and rectal aspirate for acid phospate or sperm analysis.
❑ Photographs of the patient’s injuries will also be taken. This may be delayed for a day or repeated when bruises and ecchymoses are more apparent.
❑ Most states require hospitals to report rape. The patient may not press charges and may not assist the police. If the patient doesn’t go to the hospital, she may not report the rape.
❑ If the police interview the patient in the hospital, be supportive and encourage her to recall details of the rape. Your kindness and empathy are in-valuable.
❑ The patient may also want you to call her family. Help her to verbalize anticipation of her family’s response.
Depending on the degree of injury and the organs involved, signs and symptoms vary as follows:
With both penetrating and blunt injuries, massive blood loss may cause hypovolemic shock. Generally, damage to a solid abdominal organ (liver, spleen, pancreas, or kidney) causes hemorrhage, whereas damage to a hollow organ (stomach, intestine, gallbladder, or bladder) causes rupture and release of the affected organ’s contents (including bacteria) into the abdomen, which, in turn, produces inflammation.
Both frostbite and hypothermia produce distinctive signs and symptoms.
Two types of frostbite can occur: superficial or deep. Superficial frostbite affects skin and subcutaneous tissue, especially of the face, ears, extremities, and other exposed body areas. Although it may go unnoticed at first, upon returning to a warm place, frostbite produces burning, tingling, numbness, swelling, and a mottled, blue-gray skin color.
Deep frostbite extends beyond subcutaneous tissue and usually affects the hands or feet. The skin becomes white until it’s thawed; then it turns purplish blue. Deep frostbite also produces pain, skin blisters, tissue necrosis, and gangrene.
Indications of hypothermia (a core body temperature below 95° F [35 C]) vary with severity.
❑ Mild hypothermia produces a temperature of 89.6° to 95° F (32° to 35° C), severe shivering, slurred speech, and amnesia.
❑ Moderate hypothermia results in a temperature of 86° to 89.6° F (30° to 32° C), unresponsiveness or confusion, muscle rigidity, peripheral cyanosis and, with improper rewarming, signs of shock.
❑ Severe hypothermia produces a core temperature of 77° to 86° F (25° to 30° C), with loss of deep tendon reflexes and ventricular fibrillation. The patient may appear dead, with no palpable pulse or audible heart sounds. His pupils may dilate, and he’ll appear to be in a state of rigor mortis. A temperature drop below 77° F (25° C) causes cardiopulmonary arrest and death.
Headaches may develop after a blow to the head,
either immediately or months later. There is little relationship between
the severity of the trauma and the intensity of headache pain. In most
cases, the cause of the headache is not known. Occasionally the cause is
ruptured blood vessels which result in an accumulation of blood called a
hematoma. This mass of blood can displace brain tissue and cause
headaches as well as weakness, confusion, memory loss, and seizures.
Hematomas can be drained to produce rapid relief of symptoms.
(Source: excerpt from Headache - Hope Through Research: NINDS)
When considering symptoms of Head injury, it is also important to consider Head injury as a possible cause of other medical conditions.
The Disease Database lists the following medical conditions that Head injury may cause:
Cold injuries:
Signs and symptoms
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Headache:
Signs and symptoms
(Handbook of Diseases)
Migraine headache
Muscle contraction headache
Wounds, open trauma:
Signs and symptoms
(Handbook of Diseases)
Chest injuries, blunt:
Signs and symptoms
(Handbook of Diseases)
Multiple rib fractures
Hemothorax
Further complications
Rape trauma syndrome:
Signs and symptoms
(Handbook of Diseases)
Assessment
Abdominal injuries:
Signs and symptoms
(Handbook of Diseases)
Cold injuries:
Signs and symptoms
(Handbook of Diseases)
Frostbite
Hypothermia
Article Excerpts About Symptoms of Head injury:
Head injury as a Cause of Symptoms or Medical Conditions
- (Source - Diseases Database)
Head injury as a symptom:
For a more detailed analysis of Head injury as a symptom, including causes, drug side effect causes, and drug interaction causes, please see our Symptom Center information for Head injury.
Medical articles and books on symptoms:
These general reference articles may be of interest in relation to medical signs and symptoms of disease in general:
- Diagnostic Testing for a Diagnosis of Head injury
- Research Alternative Diagnoses for Head injury
- More about Head injury
- Online Diagnosis
- Self Diagnosis Pitfalls
- Pitfalls of Online Diagnosis
- Symptoms of the Silent Killer Diseases
- Lesser known silent killer diseases
- Books on signs and symptoms
Full list of premium articles on symptoms and diagnosis
About signs and symptoms of Head injury:
The symptom information on this page attempts to provide a list of some possible signs and symptoms of Head injury. This signs and symptoms information for Head injury has been gathered from various sources, may not be fully accurate, and may not be the full list of Head injury signs or Head injury symptoms. Furthermore, signs and symptoms of Head injury may vary on an individual basis for each patient. Only your doctor can provide adequate diagnosis of any signs or symptoms and whether they are indeed Head injury symptoms.
» Next page: Diagnostic Tests for Head injury
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- Diagnostic Tests for Head injury
- Diagnosis of Head injury
- Signs of Head injury
- Complications of Head injury
- Misdiagnosis of Head injury
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